Transcript Moses Brown

The Industrial
Revolution Spreads to
North America
Review
Industrial Revolution began in Britain =>
became the world’s leading industrial power.
Inventions and ideas that were developed in
Britain were then taken to other parts of the
world.
Inventions and ideas taken to North America
by new immigrants who were settling the
land => began the development of American
industry.
Movement of Industrial
Knowledge to the United
States
B/se Britain wanted to keep their
advantage over the rest of the world, the
gov’t tried to prevent the spread of
industrial technology to other countries.
Main challenge?
How Could Britain Try to Prevent
the Movement of Industrial
Knowledge to the US?
1. Penalties if caught smuggling plans or
blueprints of the new machines out of the
country.
2. Laws to prevent immigration of skilled workers
to American colonies.
3. Laws made recruiting immigrants an offense.
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero?
b1768
When he was 15, he became an apprentice in a
textile mill
Hard worker, promoted to the position of
overseer in the mill
Learned of recruiting agents for the Americas

Philadelphia newspaper reported a reward of 100
pounds for anyone who could produce replacement
parts for Harbreaves’ spinning jenny.
Goal: once his apprenticeship was complete (6 ½
years), he would immigrate to the Americas (seen
as land of promise)
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero? continued…
1789: at 21 years of age, Slater sailed to the
newly independent United States (after American
War of Independence)
Memorized the technical drawings of textile
machines
However, he needed his apprenticeship papers to
prove to the Americans that he was a skilled
textile worker – sewed them into the lining of his
coat.
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero? continued…
Disguised himself as a farmer, boarded a ship,
and arrived in New York in November, 1789
Heard that Moses Brown, a Quaker from
Pawtucket, Rode Island, was having trouble
w/his textile machines


Moses Brown – mill owner
Quaker: a member of the Religious Society of Friends.
The Quakers are a group of Christians who use no
scripture and believe in great simplicity in daily life
and in worship. Their services consist mainly of silent
meditation
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero? continued…
Slater offered to help Brown with a moneyback guarantee: “If I do not make as good a
yarn as they do in England, I will have
nothing for my services.”
Brown hired him
Slater soon regretted his promise…why?
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero? continued…
December, 1790 (13 months after Slater
arrived in New York): Slater had Brown’s
72-spindle machine running properly
1793: Slater rebuilt the mill when it
became inadequate to meet the demand for
cloth
Sam Slater:
Traitor or Hero? continued…
April 20, 1835: Sam Slater died
a
A
Textile industry in the USA became the
foundation for other industries.
Textile industry in USA remains one of the
most important industries today.
…
Was Sam Slater a traitor or a hero?
Water Power in New England
The states of New England
are Connecticut, Maine,
Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont. Together, they form
the northeasternmost point of
the United States.
Water power was essential for the new textile
machines.
New England states fortunate b/se they had a
large number of streams that would supply
the needed power
Geography
& Politics
New England’s
geography and politics
helped to foster the
growth of the textile
industry b/se:
1. A
2. A
3. A
4. a
Results of the Industrial
Revolution
Speedy Production
Because of



Assembly lines
Interchangeable parts
Inventions
Craftsmen Out
Products used to be made by individual
shop owners who were specialists
Each product was different
Now products were identical, and made
in factories
Urbanization
More and more
people moved to
cities where there
were factory jobs
This was more
true of the North
than the South
which remained
agricultural
Machines In
Sewing Machines
Cotton Gin
Steam power
Bessemer Steel Process resulted in
large sky scrapers that could now be
built
Money Invested
Stock market
invented
“investors” would
receive a
percentage of
profits
New York came
stock market
center
More Workers Together
People worked in large factories instead
of small shops
The workers were exposed to people
from different cultures
The “working class” emerged